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Lead Like a Scientist: How to Bring Experimentation into Change Leadership

Lead Like a Scientist: How to Bring Experimentation into Change Leadership

Most organizations still treat change like a rollout. As if it’s a product launch that follows a tightly sequenced Gantt chart, checked off by PMO teams in bi-weekly syncs. But here’s the hard truth: change doesn’t behave like that any more—if it ever did.

We’re in an environment where AI disrupts workflows overnight, where employee expectations shift in real time, and where what worked six months ago is now outdated. Yet somehow, organizations cling to 20th-century models of managing change like a “programme” with linear stages and milestone charts. It’s not working, and you know it.

If you’re leading a transformation right now, you probably feel like you’re spinning multiple plates: adoption is lagging, engagement is patchy, and your team’s patience is wearing thin. And here’s the part no one wants to admit—neither you nor your team really knows if what you’re doing is actually working.

That’s not a failure of leadership. It’s a failure of the outdated change playbook.

Change is a Series of Experiments, Not a Blueprint

Stop treating change like an engineering project. It’s not about executing a perfect plan—it’s about running controlled experiments. Scientists don’t expect success on the first try. They form hypotheses, test them, observe what happens, and adjust quickly. Failed experiments aren’t setbacks, they’re data points.

That’s the mindset today’s leaders need: less rigidity, more real-time learning. Rather than relying on static plans, structure your change initiatives to test, learn, and adapt in rapid cycles. With today’s AI and analytics tools, you can access real-time signals—employee sentiment, productivity trends, adoption behaviours—far faster than traditional pulse surveys or lagging reports.

Tools like Salesforce’s Agentforce are now automating repetitive tasks, generating contextual responses, and surfacing insights directly within daily workflows. Atlassian’s Rovo integrates across Jira, Confluence, and Trello to improve productivity and knowledge-sharing—especially useful in cross-functional projects. And while Microsoft’s Copilot initially faced criticism for being intrusive, it has since matured. With features like Copilot Memory and seamless integration across Microsoft 365, it now provides targeted, context-aware support without disrupting user workflows.

These tools aren’t just tech upgrades, they’re the infrastructure for a faster, more experimental approach to change. Leaders who learn how to use them well are enabled to iterate, respond, and move on. There is no need to wait for perfect alignment.

The Science of Change Leadership

This experimental approach fundamentally shifts your role. You’re no longer the architect drafting perfect plans; you’re the lead scientist designing revealing experiments. Your value comes not from having all the answers, but from asking better questions and designing tests that yield actionable insights.

The implications are profound:

  • Speed outweighs perfection. Quick, imperfect experiments yield more valuable learning than delayed, perfect plans.
  • Failure becomes valuable. Failed experiments aren’t setbacks; they’re data points illuminating the path forward.
  • Transparency becomes essential. Share the experimental nature of your approach with stakeholders. Most will appreciate the authenticity and opportunity for input.

 

It’s Not Rocket Science

The good news is that you don’t need a full-scale overhaul to start leading differently. Just launch one small experiment this week. Try a new way of communicating. Shift a team ritual. Pilot a new incentive. Track what happens—then adjust. You’ll learn more in two weeks than any 30-page change strategy deck could tell you.

You already know the old methods aren’t cutting it. And now, with AI tools that give you live feedback and behavioural signals, you have what you need to lead change in real time—not from a static plan.

If this resonates—and you’re ready to lead with sharper tools and a more adaptive mindset—subscribe to our newsletter for deeper insights, smarter frameworks, and real-world guidance that empowers you to join the 30% club of successful change leaders.

Rewriting the Narrative

At Changentum, we don’t “manage” resistance. We partner with leaders to replace outdated change management with human-centred change leadership. Our approach replaces top-down mandates with dialogue, equips teams to lead from every seat, and turns sceptics into advocates.

No blame. No jargon. Just results.

Digital Friction: The Silent Force Killing Your Digital Transformation

Digital Friction: The Silent Force Killing Your Digital Transformation

The AI revolution has dramatically raised the stakes for digital transformation, and organizations are racing to implement AI-enhanced solutions at unprecedented speed and scale. With global AI spending projected to reach $632 billion by 2028 ([IDC, 2024], what was once a competitive advantage is now an existential imperative.

Yet beneath this technological gold rush lurks an uncomfortable truth: according to McKinsey, a staggering 70% of digital transformations still fail to meet their objectives, with only 16% successfully improving performance and equipping organizations for long-term success [McKinsey, 2018]. Boston Consulting Group similarly reports that 70% of digital transformations fall short of their targets– i.e. meeting or exceeding expectations on the desired results and creating sustainable changer [BCG, 2023].

Why such consistent failure? Because we’re focusing on the wrong thing.

The Elephant in the Digital Room

While organizations obsess over implementing new technologies, they’re overlooking what Gartner calls “digital friction”, This is the combination of technical, process, and organizational barriers that actually make work more difficult and time-consuming than it should be. Gartner research highlights that this friction consumes up to 30% of employees’ productive time, as they waste a sizeable chunk of their day context switching, app hoping, and even worse, searching and reviewing the wrong information [Gartner, 2020].

ZapierData’s 2021 Data Report confirms these findings, stating that a shocking 90% of knowledge workers say that they spend up to five hours a day checking messenger apps each day. Imagine what that variable would look like today.

Let’s be brutally honest: giving employees six different collaboration tools doesn’t make them more productive – it drowns them in notification hell. Implementing an enterprise-wide CRM doesn’t improve customer relationships if your teams need 15 clicks to find basic customer information.

Digital friction isn’t just an IT problem; it’s a leadership blind spot with terrible consequences.

Five Killers of Digital Transformation

Digital friction manifests in predictable patterns that silently erode productivity:

  • Technology Sprawl: Organizations implement solutions in silos, creating digital labyrinths where employees waste hours jumping between disconnected systems.
  • Process Fragmentation: Digital workflows break across departmental boundaries, forcing employees to become human “middleware” translating between systems.
  • Interface Complexity: Systems designed for IT professionals rather than everyday users create cognitive overload and resistance.
  • Data Swamps: Information is duplicated, contradictory, outdated, or buried so deep that finding what you need becomes a treasure hunt.
  • Communication Overload: The very tools meant to connect us (e.g. Slack, Intranets and the like) create constant interruptions, fragmenting attention and deep work.

Leading Digital Change From Friction to Flow

Traditional change management approaches with their emphasis on communication plans, training modules, and adoption metrics completely miss the point. They focus on getting people to adapt to flawed systems rather than creating systems that adapt to people.

The path forward requires a fundamental shift in thinking. At its core, reducing digital friction is about creating environments where employees can achieve a state of flow—that highly productive mental state where work feels effortless and purposeful. This means moving beyond measuring success by implementation milestones and instead focusing on how technology enhances human experience.

The most impactful approach begins with systematically mapping your digital ecosystem through the eyes of your employees. Where do they struggle? Where do they waste time? Where does technology help rather than hinder? By elevating these friction points from individual frustrations to strategic priorities, organizations can make targeted improvements that yield exponential productivity gains.

The organizations that thrive won’t be those with the most advanced technology stacks, but those that create digital environments where employees can do their best work without fighting against the very tools meant to help them.

Time to Rethink Your Approach

Is your digital transformation creating more friction than function? Are your employees working harder just to keep up with your new systems rather than using them to work smarter?

If you’re ready to rethink your approach to technology change – to focus on reducing friction rather than just driving adoption – let’s talk.

Book a free Digital Friction Audit where we’ll identify the hidden barriers slowing down your transformation and develop a practical roadmap to eliminate them.

Because true digital transformation isn’t about changing your technology. It’s about changing how your technology changes work.

Harnessing the Power of Storytelling in Change Leadership

Harnessing the Power of Storytelling in Change Leadership

Change is often approached as a process to manage, with structured plans, phases, and templates. Leaders outline the strategy and execution steps, expecting teams to follow along. Yet despite having clear objectives and project roadmaps, change efforts frequently stall, meet resistance, or fail outright.

Why does this happen?

Because change isn’t just a process, it’s a human experience. And humans don’t engage with spreadsheets, data, and logic alone, they engage with stories. This is why storytelling is one of the most powerful tools in change leadership. It helps teams make sense of the uncertainty, emotions, and resistance that naturally arise during transformation.

The Science Behind Storytelling and Change

Neuroscience research shows that our brains are wired for stories. Unlike raw data, which only activates the language-processing center of the brain, storytelling engages the sensory, emotional, and decision-making regions, making information more tangible and memorable.

Research from Princeton University shows that when someone hears a story, their brain activity mirrors that of the storyteller, creating a shared experience that enhances connection and retention. Similarly, studies from Stanford’s Graduate School of Business reveal that stories are significantly more effective at influencing beliefs and behavior than facts alone.

In the context of change leadership, storytelling builds trust, fosters empathy, and increases engagement. Harvard Business Review research highlights how storytelling triggers the release of oxytocin, a brain chemical responsible for trust and cooperation. These are both essential for getting teams to embrace change.

How Storytelling Transforms Change Leadership

1. Stories Make Change Tangible

Many change initiatives feel abstract to employees—structured as a set of strategic objectives, project phases, or implementation plans that lack personal connection.

Storytelling bridges this gap.

Rather than saying:

“We are implementing a new operating system.”

A story-driven approach would sound like:

“Right now, our teams are buried in tedious administrative work, manually entering data and juggling inefficient processes. It’s frustrating and time-consuming, pulling them away from what truly matters—our customers. With the new operating system, they’ll spend less time on repetitive tasks and more time delivering real value. This isn’t just about upgrading technology—it’s about making their work easier, faster, and more meaningful.”

This narrative makes the challenge and the benefit real. Instead of presenting the change as just another system rollout, it connects to what people care about—their daily frustrations and the promise of something better.

By framing change as a journey toward a more efficient, fulfilling way of working, teams can see themselves in the story and feel more engaged in the process.

2. Stories Create a Shared Language for Uncertainty

Even without realizing it, leaders naturally use storytelling and metaphors to describe business challenges:

“We’re navigating uncharted waters.”

“We need to turn the ship around.”

“We’re at a crossroads.”

“This feels like climbing a mountain.”

These metaphors help teams orient themselves in times of change, giving them a way to describe uncertainty and complexity. But in my work with organizations, I’ve taken this a step further. I no longer rely on the simplified Change Curve to explain transformation. Instead, I use the Change Leadership Map—a structured visual framework that helps teams:

  • Diagnose where they and their stakeholders are in the change journey
  • Discuss challenges in a way that resonates with real experiences
  • Determine together how to move forward with clarity and confidence

By replacing abstract models with a story-driven map, the Change Leadership Map harnesses the power of storytelling to make the way organizations talk about change more relatable, actionable, and engaging.

3. Storytelling Fosters Psychological Safety

A common assumption is that the greatest barrier to change is resistance. However, resistance is not the root problem, but a symptom of it. The real challenge is

About openness, and creating a space where people feel safe to talk about the real issues. Employees often hold back concerns because they:

  • Fear being perceived as negative, resistant, or uninformed
  • Feel they have no control over the change
  • Aren’t sure how to express uncertainty in a way that won’t be dismissed

Harvard Business School professor Dr. Amy Edmondson’s research on psychological safety found that teams with high psychological safety are more engaged, adaptable, and resilient—but many organizations fail to cultivate this environment during change.

That’s why the Change Leadership Map was designed using metaphors and storytelling. Instead of forcing employees into uncomfortable direct confrontation about their concerns, it invites them into a structured, non-threatening dialogue.

For example, rather than an employee saying:

“I think this initiative is moving too fast, and I feel overwhelmed.”

They might instead feel more comfortable saying:

“I feel like my team is stuck in Confusion Rapids, as too many things are shifting at once, and we’re struggling to keep up.”

This shift removes personal blame or defensiveness and allows for a constructive conversation about real concerns rather than surface-level compliance.

When organizations integrate storytelling into their change approach, they move from silencing discomfort to surfacing valuable insights. Instead of resistance, they create genuine engagement, alignment, and shared anticipation about the journey ahead.

Free Lightning Session: Master Change Leadership with the Change Leadership Map

Free Lightning Session: Master Change Leadership with the Change Leadership Map

Leading change is not a walk in the park. Neither is it like the clean, linear chart so often depicted in the so-called “Change Curve.” Real change is more like a challenging expedition. It involves some serious planning, navigating through rough terrain, overcoming unexpected obstacles, and experiencing highs and lows—all while being pulled back by colleagues and team members who don’t share your vision.

We developed the Change Leadership Map to reflect the messy reality of change and project management and to help organizations get a better sense of what they are up against when trying to initiate and drive change.
In this free Lightning Session, we’ll explore how you can use the Change Leadership Map in your project team to sense-check priorities, recognize hidden assumptions, and adopt a strategic mindset to achieve change leadership.

 

What You’ll Learn

  • Understanding Organizational Barriers to Change: Learn how leadership culture and existing structures can create barriers to change, and what you can do to address them.
  • Engaging Stakeholders for Successful Change: Discover practical techniques to involve key stakeholders, gain buy-in, and reduce resistance during change efforts.
  • Applying the Change Leadership Map in Your Team: Use this structured approach to assess priorities, identify hidden challenges, and navigate through complex transitions.
  • Adopting a Change Leadership Mindset: Develop the skills to plan, anticipate challenges, and adapt your leadership approach to different phases of change.

 

Why This Matters

    Change is rarely straightforward. Organizations often underestimate the complexity of transformation, assuming it will follow a predictable path. In reality, leaders and teams must navigate shifting priorities, stakeholder resistance, and unforeseen obstacles. Without a clear approach, momentum stalls, and teams lose confidence in the process.

    By using the Change Leadership Map, project teams and change leaders gain a structured, visual framework to identify where they are in the process, recognize potential roadblocks, and align their strategies accordingly.

    The Lightning Session will equip you with the insights and tools needed to take control of the change journey, ensuring smoother transitions and stronger leadership through uncertainty.

     

    Sign-Up Details 

    Exclusive Bonus

    As part of this session, you’ll receive a downloadable workbook for the Change Leadership Map Workbook, a practical tool designed to help you and your team visualize the change journey, identify roadblocks, and refine your approach to managing transformation.

    If you can’t make the live session, please do sign up anyway so that you can access the recording and bonus materials.

    Join me on my mission to make change manageable again.

    Change Leadership Fundamentals: Level-Up Your Skills by Learning With Peers

    Change Leadership Fundamentals: Level-Up Your Skills by Learning With Peers

    I am excited (and slightly trepidacious) to share that the waitlist is now open for my upcoming course:

    Change Leadership Fundamentals for Busy Teams.

    If you’re a change manager, a project manager, or are leading a team, this course is your springboard to mastering actionable, real-world strategies for navigating complex organizational change.

    What Sets This Course Apart?

    Unlike traditional theory-heavy programs, this interactive two-week course revolves around a carefully crafted change scenario—a safe, realistic way to explore challenging situations and characters with no need to mention colleagues or confidential company details. Our approach focuses on strategies and tools that are actionable, effective and easy to maintain, so that you can save admin time and focus on making a positive impact.

    What You’ll Gain

    • Tools to craft clear and compelling change stories
    • Strategies to align stakeholders and address resistance
    • A framework for integrating change and project management seamlessly
    • Steps to ensure long-term success through effective handovers and onboarding

    You’ll be able to take what you learn and immediately apply it in your organization—whether you’re dealing with a major transformation or smaller-scale changes.

    Designed for Busy Professionals

    This course is designed with busy professionals in mind. There are

    • Four live Zoom workshops over two weeks (Tuesdays and Thursdays at 4:30 pm GMT/ 11:30 am EST), and
    • Two optional bonus group coaching sessions at the same time on Wednesdays
    • With additional time for reading, assignments, and peer coaching, expect around 4-6 hours per week.

    Two bonus group coaching sessions will be available on Wednesdays. These sessions are PRIVATE and are not recorded in order to create a safe space and maintain confidentiality.

    Get on the Waitlist

    If you’re ready to build confidence in managing change or know someone who might benefit, join the waitlist now. And please feel free to share this post with your network!

    👉 Sign up here!

    Join me on my mission to make change manageable again.

    Forget Those Dusty Approaches: Build a Change Operating System That Actually Works

    Forget Those Dusty Approaches: Build a Change Operating System That Actually Works

    Traditional change approaches are often still managed in a way that assumes ideal conditions on the ground, but that is not the way business actually works. Organizations are inherently complex, messy and not always ready to change. In other words, change initiatives are either coming up against a culture of: “Why fix what is not broken?” or “Stop! We’re already overloaded!”

    Yet time and time again, leaders take it for granted that

    • Teams already have the time, resources, knowledge and bandwidth to seamlessly adopt new ways of working.
    • People can just need to “get with the programme” with change without creating the right environment for change to succeed.

    Leaders ignoring the reality that most teams are already stretched too thin forces project teams to strip back their efforts to the basic minimum, rather than delivering sustainable execution.

    That’s why we do things differently. At Changentum, we focus not on change management but change leadership. This is about establishing a Change Operating System which makes available the appropriate resources and creates the environment that is conducive to successful change. Rather than adding more admin to an already busy organization, we help change leaders create their own structured, lightweight systems and processes that unleash capacity, and enable change to deliver results.

    Here’s how: 

    Change Must Be Built into the Operating System of the Business

    Most change efforts fail because they operate outside of daily business processes. But any changes have to build on the current foundations within the organization and be embedded into the way people work.

    Instead of adding more layers of admin, the right approach enables faster understanding and adoption. It also removes friction and unleashes execution capacity, because people are being introduced to a more advanced way of implementing the principles of what they already know.

    A few prerequisites of a Change Operating System include:

    • Clear leadership sponsorship, so teams get the guidance and support needed to execute change.
    • Processes that adapt to how teams actually work, not a rigid, one-size-fits-all framework.
    • Accountability is built into governance, not just leadership messaging.

     

    The 3P-O Framework: A Practical Way to Make Change Stick

    The Change Operating System we use with our clients at Changentum is the 3P-O Framework, a system designed to ensure teams can structure, learn, adopt, and adapt as they work their way through change. 3P-O stands for:

    • Planning: Align leadership first, assess capacity, and set realistic change objectives.
    • Processes: Make change a natural part of existing workflows and build new capabilities on those foundations.
    • People: Equip teams with the tools, autonomy, and leadership support to empower them to deliver the change with a sense of empowerment and purpose.
    • Outcomes: Define and measure the high level success metrics from start to finish so that results are tangible and impactful in the business.

    💡 The result? Organizational and individual change-readiness which doesn’t feel random or unpredictable; it’s an adaptable, forward-looking, and natural way of working.

     

    Change Never Starts with a Blank Slate—So Stop Managing It Like It Does

    Most change methodologies assume an ideal environment where everyone has:

    • Full leadership alignment from day one
    • No competing priorities, i.e. with other urgent and important change initiatives
    • Sufficient time and resources to focus on change

    That’s actually never the case.

    Teams are already overloaded and nobody is sitting there waiting for your change initiative to land on their desk. At the same time, leaders are following their own agendas and organizational priorities which are sometimes wildly conflicting.

    This is the reality of change: messy, unpredictable, disorganized environments where people are doing their best, but are hopelessly overloaded.

    💡 The Fix: Instead of forcing change into a rigid model, organizations need a flexible, modular Change Operating System that works within real-world constraints.

     

    So, How Do You Make Change Stick?

    🚫 No more assuming organizations start from a blank slate.
    🚫 No more treating change as an “extra project” instead of an embedded way of working.
    🚫 No more disengaged teams struggling with unrealistic execution plans.

    Change sticks when it’s built into the organization’s daily rhythm—not treated as a one-time initiative.

    📅 Schedule a Call to build a practical, structured change system that works.